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John Snow (15 March 1813 – 16 June 1858 [1]) was an English physician and a leader in the development of anaesthesia and medical hygiene.He is considered one of the founders of modern epidemiology and early germ theory, in part because of his work in tracing the source of a cholera outbreak in London's Soho, which he identified as a particular public water pump.
Original map by John Snow showing the clusters of cholera cases (indicated by stacked rectangles) in the London epidemic of 1854. The contaminated pump is located at the crossroads of Broad Street and Cambridge Street (now Lexington Street), running into Little Windmill Street.
The John Snow, formerly the Newcastle-upon-Tyne, is a public house in Broadwick Street, in the Soho district of the City of Westminster, part of the West End of London, and dates back to the 1870s. It is named for the British epidemiologist and anaesthetist John Snow , who identified the nearby water pump as the source of a cholera outbreak in ...
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Cholera broke out 27 times during the hajj at Mecca from the 19th century to 1930. [56] The sixth pandemic killed more than 800,000 in India. [12] The 1902–1904 cholera epidemic claimed 200,000 lives in the Philippines, [57] including their revolutionary hero and first prime minister Apolinario Mabini. A 1905 governmental report mentioned he ...
The Ghost Map: The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic – and How it Changed Science, Cities and the Modern World is a book by Steven Berlin Johnson in which he describes the most intense outbreak of cholera in Victorian London and centers on John Snow and Henry Whitehead. [1] It was released on 19 October 2006 through Riverhead.
John Snow's 1854 map. Cholera cases are in black. John Snow had already postulated nearly a decade earlier that water was to blame for cholera epidemics, and this investigation strengthened his claim. Just as his contemporary Nightingale had done, he also made connections between events and used visual empirical evidence to support his claims.
The Pumphandle Lecture was established in 1993 by the John Snow Society, named for John Snow, to celebrate the removal of the Broad Street pump handle that took place in September 1854 during the cholera epidemic in Soho. [1] It is held every year around September. [4] The inaugural lecture was delivered by Nick Ward and chaired by Paul Fine. [1]